Showing posts with label reviews. Show all posts
Showing posts with label reviews. Show all posts

Friday, December 23, 2011

Dallas Morning News :: West of 98 & Best of the West 2011

West of 98
Edited by Lynn Stegner and
Russell Rowland
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Book review: West of 98 and Best of the West 2011
By Jenny Shank

“Westerners have been reminded … that we are interesting in some of the same ways that cavemen or headhunters are interesting,” writes Montana novelist Russell Rowland in West of 98, one of two new anthologies published by the University of Texas Press. But what’s clear from these collections, one of fiction and the other of essays, is that Westerners are curiosities to ourselves as much as we are to outsiders.

The 20 stories in the fiction collection, Best of the West 2011, display a wide range of styles and structures, with a few common themes recurring — the primacy of characters’ interaction with gorgeous, yet treacherous, Western landscapes; their penchant for road trips; and their frequent bouts of criminal behavior.


Best of the West 2011
Edited by James Thomas and
D. Seth Horton
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K.L. Cook vividly imagines a boy’s encounter with legendary outlaws in Depression-era Texas in the moving “Bonnie and Clyde in the Backyard.” Meth addicts steal the identities of unsuspecting Nebraskans in Judy Doenges’ “Melinda.” A bereaved couple unknowingly enjoys a moment of respite amid the ongoing drug war in Nuevo Laredo in Peter LaSalle’s elegant “Lunch Across the Bridge,” while an Oklahoma couple reignites old sparks when they play chicken with oncoming traffic in Aaron Gwyn’s startling “Drive.”

In Ron Carlson’s “Escape from Prison,” an embezzling banker retreats to his Colorado cabin after his malfeasance is discovered. The narrator of Claire Vaye Watkins’ clever, epistolary “The Last Thing We Need” reveals a shooting that has haunted him his entire life. In Shawn Vestal’s innovative “Opposition In All Things,” Rulon Warren returns from World War I to the Idaho Mormon community where he grew up and is possessed by the spirit of a gun-toting pioneer forebear, who urges him to go down with his gun blasting.

The essayists featured in West of 98, which the novelist Rowland edited with Lynn Stegner, are of a more law-abiding sort than the characters in Best of the West. Fans of contemporary Western American literature will recognize most of the authors — the editors gathered contributions from many of the most eloquent writers in the region.


Tuesday, May 24, 2011

Libraries and the Cultural Record :: The State Library and Archives of Texas

The State Library and
Archives of Texas

by David B. Gracy II
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review of The State Library and Archives of Texas: A History, 1835-1962
by David B. Gracy II
which appeared in Libraries & the Cultural Record

We owe a debt of thanks to David Gracy for his history of the Texas State Library and Archives. This was one of the early state archival agencies that emerged in Southern states around the turn of the twentieth century, providing a focus for improving programs for government records and manuscripts. The publication of Gracy’s book is important in itself. The scholarly literature about American archives includes too few works on the profession’s history. We need more studies on U.S. archives’ social, intellectual, and institutional foundations, and the developments in all these aspects, to help us understand today’s archival conditions.

Read the entire review (.pdf) »

Monday, May 2, 2011

American Songwriter :: Hard Ground


Hard Ground
Photographs by Michael O’Brien
Poems by Tom Waits
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Tom Waits and Michael O’Brien: Hard Ground
By Greg Gaston

May 2nd, 2011 at 5:00 am

In a gritty but affecting collaborative book of photographs and poetry, Michael O’Brien and Tom Waits offer up a compassionate portrait of America’s homeless. Between O’Brien’s black-and-white pictures and Waits’ boho nursery rhyme verse, this collection aches for the plight of the indigent, the disenfranchised, and the ones lost among us on our country’s mean streets.

read the full review »

Friday, April 15, 2011

American Book Review :: Golondrina, why did you leave me?

Golondrina, why did you leave me?
by Bárbara Renaud González
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American Book Review
Volume 32, Number 3, March/April 2011

Stuck in Murky Eddies
by Diana López

When, I wonder, will Mexican American men be portrayed as strong and assertive without the brutal aspects of machismo? When will we read about Mexican American mothers who are not silenced victims? When will the settings of these stories move out of run-down houses, barns, and chicken coops? So many have crossed the border and successfully achieved the American Dream with all it promotes: education, jobs with benefits, comfy houses with flea-free dogs. Yet the literature seems stuck in the murky eddies of the Rio Grande.

Golondrina, why did you leave me? by Bárbara Renaud González is a good example. There are powerful passages and poignant scenes in González's novel; however, she, like many other contemporary writers, continues to rely on such stereotypes and the cheating patrón, the broken-down laborer, the long-suffering matriarch.

Golondrina is the story of Amada García. Married to an abusive man, Amada leaves Mexico, and her young daughter, and crosses the border to Texas where she marries again. Her second husband, Lázaro, is not so violent, but he is poor, embittered, and burdened with a terrible sense of disenfranchisement. In a quest for work and for a better home, he and Amada move to different towns in the Southwest. Meanwhile, they have children and struggle to raise them.